Little did I know that this TRIP of a lifetime would include a RIDE of a lifetime!
Our busload of 40 had just finished exploring the rose-red city of Petra, a phenomenon tucked away in a valley running from the Dead Sea to the Gulf of Aqaba where nature and man have conspired together to create a civilization carved out of sandstone that stands unmatched in the architectural annals of human history. In other words, Petra is a destination that simply sits in the category of you’ve-got-to-see-it-to-believe-it. It’s a place where photos only offer a tease of its magnificence.
As you enter the city through a narrow and winding gorge, the Siq, you are flanked by soaring cliffs that reach high into the Jordanian skies. At the end the gorge, you are stunned and breathless as you catch your first glimpse of Al-Khazneh—The Treasury. Any attempt to adequately describe this wonder of the world falls far short.
After you have soaked in this city sculpted into the giant red mountains (and shot a ton of photos), you have the option of a horseback ride back to the bus. And in spite of the slapdash ‘saddles’, and perhaps more importantly in spite of better judgment, a few of us mounted up for the ride.
Long story short, somewhere along the way back things went south—in a hurry. I was snapping some photos of my fellow horsemen when all of the sudden my horse got spooked (for us non-equestrian types that’s a technical term for ‘went crazy’!) and took off in full gallop. For the next several minutes, I had no idea how this ride was going to end. In the moment, two things crossed my mind. First, this was NOT in the travel brochure! And second, falling off the horse was NOT a good option! So I hung on. To this day I still don’t know why or how the agitated horse eventually decided to stop.
My ‘ride of a lifetime’ is a fitting picture of the reality of leadership. There are simply times when things are UNCERTAIN—when you have no idea how things will turn out. And when these times become your times, ‘hanging on’ is sometimes the best you can hope for.
So let’s probe this a little. In times of uncertainty, as a leader, what DO you hang on to? Allow me to flag a few thoughts.
In moments when you cannot “see” God at work, in an act of faith, you choose to believe that He IS at work—unseen, but on duty.
God uses uncertainties as part of His schoolhouse to shape a leader.
When it is all said and done, it is the leader who chooses to meet the times of uncertainty with the truths of certainty that will stand.
Chuck Olson
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Written by Chuck Olson
Written by Chuck Olson
Written by Chuck Olson
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